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Stories from September 24, 2012
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1.Myspace previews complete redesign (myspace.com)
333 points by michael_fine on Sept 24, 2012 | 264 comments
2.Adobe Edge Web Fonts (adobe.com)
308 points by ujeezy on Sept 24, 2012 | 82 comments
3.Websockets 101 (pocoo.org)
289 points by the_mitsuhiko on Sept 24, 2012 | 50 comments
4.The Pendulum Swings, Again (jacquesmattheij.com)
284 points by hawke on Sept 24, 2012 | 122 comments
5.Google Spanner's Most Surprising Revelation: NoSQL is Out and NewSQL is In (highscalability.com)
248 points by aespinoza on Sept 24, 2012 | 79 comments
6.SHA-3 to Be Announced (schneier.com)
243 points by stalled on Sept 24, 2012 | 53 comments
7.Why American Phone, Cable and Internet Bills are so High (yahoo.com)
244 points by bretpiatt on Sept 24, 2012 | 254 comments
8.I Am Worried About The Future Of Python (ironfroggy.com)
218 points by Floopsy on Sept 24, 2012 | 203 comments
9.Nigerian scammer gets a laptop from me (notla.com)
210 points by JeremyMorgan on Sept 24, 2012 | 139 comments
10.Leak shows EU's plans for large scale surveillance of all communications (edri.org)
206 points by 1337biz on Sept 24, 2012 | 33 comments
11.How Corning Created the Ultrathin, Ultrastrong Material of the Future (wired.com)
199 points by lnguyen on Sept 24, 2012 | 33 comments
12.New Zealand PM requests inquiry into illegal Megaupload wire tapping (beehive.govt.nz)
181 points by polemic on Sept 24, 2012 | 37 comments
13.How Apple's Obsession with Google Is Hurting Apple (cultofmac.com)
177 points by mhartl on Sept 24, 2012 | 138 comments
14.SeenBefore: A search engine for what you have seen before (seenbefore.com)
175 points by chrishan on Sept 24, 2012 | 95 comments
15.Google for Entrepreneurs (google.com)
169 points by rf45 on Sept 24, 2012 | 23 comments
16.Bank of America Giving Access to Random Accounts (privateinternetaccess.com)
159 points by rasengan on Sept 24, 2012 | 44 comments
17.Quit My Job For Consulting: Two Months Later (stevekle.in)
157 points by stevenklein on Sept 24, 2012 | 137 comments
18.I’ll Give MongoDB Another Try In Ten Years (diegobasch.com)
140 points by nachopg on Sept 24, 2012 | 189 comments
19.The Joy of Quiet (nytimes.com)
135 points by neel980 on Sept 24, 2012 | 45 comments
20.Do Web Developers Ever Learn? (bitroar.posterous.com)
130 points by dennisgorelik on Sept 24, 2012 | 91 comments
21.The GitHub hiring experience (github.com/blog)
130 points by Empro on Sept 24, 2012 | 38 comments
22.Eating for Health, Not Weight (nytimes.com)
108 points by rhollos on Sept 24, 2012 | 85 comments
23.Facebook Users Report Seeing Old Private Messages Showing Up On Timelines (techcrunch.com)
108 points by toumhi on Sept 24, 2012 | 144 comments

As a computer scientist and an Opera user this actually insults me: http://i.imgur.com/7k0bN.png

Ironically Opera was the one who proposed the <video>-tag which this site uses for it's rotating LP, in 2007. [1] Way to exclude users.

[1]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTML5_video#History_of_.3Cvideo...

25.Learning to Learn (simpleprogrammer.com)
104 points by jsonmez on Sept 24, 2012 | 32 comments

The most interesting thing about these recent trends is human nature.

I remember back in year 2000/2001 how everybody was talking about freedom, open-source and the open nature of the Internet. I remember how the closed garden that Microsoft tried to create was frowned upon. Small companies that were picking the Internet as a delivery platform and using open-source/multi-platform technologies were on the forefront of innovation. Of course regular consumers and businesses never cared, but as Paul Graham once said, if you want to see the future trends in computing, you have to look at what hackers are using today.

Then OS X happened, this UNIX-compatible OS that was shiny and cool and all of your UNIX tools were compatible with it and you could run some pretty important proprietary software too, like MS Office or Photoshop. It was more productive for developers than Windows. Compared to Linux it was friendlier to all people. And suddenly Apple was hip again and it slowly captured the hearts of developers.

Then the iPhone happened and people didn't mind that it was a closed garden, because there has never been anything like it. Anything that Apple allowed on this new platform, it was taken as a gift, as it was their platform, so if they wanted to ban an app for "duplicating existing functionality" then openness be damned, it was their product after all. Then the stories about lone developers getting rich on the App Store happened, and people didn't mind being at the behest of Apple, as long as they could have some piece of that awesome pie.

Of course, countless of reasons were given by tech pundits, trying to rationalize the walled garden they've created - it is better for grandmas that have their PCs ridden with viruses, it is better for the protection of our children, it exposes computing to a wider mass (even though computing in this context means mostly consumption), it solves the problem of app marketing for individual developers without huge marketing budgets, etc... there's always some reason for why Apple was right to act the way it did. Even now that they've released a shitty GMaps replacement, some genuinely believe that they had no choice, when for a company like Apple there are always choices available.

Let's not forget for a moment the ultimate argument against this closed garden: if you don't like it, you are free to go somewhere else.

And now Apple started suing left and right, which in my opinion is what companies do when finding themselves in the innovator's dilemma, and is doing so while dropping the ball on new versions of its products. They are still successful and they might produce some more golden eggs in the future, but the innovation frenzy of the iPod era is over and they know it.

And yet people still cheer for them, even though as far as openness is concerned, Apple makes Microsoft look good. And it was only 12 years ago that people hated Microsoft with a passion for being an obstacle to innovation, even though Microsoft never banned any app from running on Windows or restricted its usage only to certain hardware (but surprise, since Apple has been doing it so successfully, Microsoft is going to start doing it with Windows 8 ... hurray for the renewed and totally not evil Microsoft).

I own an Android phone and an iPad. I love my iPad, but it was a gift and I secretly yearn for a Nexus tablet that has the same size + 3G. I also voted with my wallet against apps like Instagram, because I'm primarily an Android user and the aesthetic senses of developers like Marco don't really solve any my problems.

I also remember the day I got my Galaxy S, even though I owned an iPhone 3GS ... I got out of my way to buy one out of frustration because Apple was banning apps for blocking calls and SMS messages from specific phone numbers (but hey, look how it "just works"). And I predict similar frustration levels as use-cases for my iPad are unfolding. Already I'm pretty pissed off about my carrier having the ability to enable/disable the tethering option on my iPad.

If this is the future of computing, then I shudder to think of the consequences.

27.Filepicker.io launches Django, Rails, PHP, Phonegap libraries (filepicker.io)
99 points by brettcvz on Sept 24, 2012 | 40 comments
28.Dear Canonical: please let me pay for Ubuntu (webstylr.com)
97 points by webstylr on Sept 24, 2012 | 88 comments
29.Dear Internet: please move the share buttons from the web page to the browser
93 points by jacobn on Sept 24, 2012 | 90 comments

The historical revisionism among the Appleistas is a bit disconcerting. This is not a matter of the "suits" overruling Jobs' "pirates". Apple's current anti-Google jihad is Jobs' baby. This is what he wanted. Now, it's entirely possible that he would never have authorized iOS shipping with a broken maps application, but to suggest that Apple's current direction is anything other than his idea and his impetus is naive in the extreme.

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